Lake Afambo

Lake Afambo is one of a chain of lakes into which the Awash River empties its waters. It is located at the eastern end of the Afar Region of Ethiopia.

Lake Afambo
Lake Afambo
Locationeastern end of the Afar Region
Coordinates11°25′19″N 41°40′21″E
Primary inflowsAwash River
Basin countriesEthiopia
Max. length13 km (8.1 mi)
Max. width2 km (1.2 mi)
Surface area1,760 ha (4,300 acres)

Overview

The lake lies on a roughly north–south axis, 13 kilometers long by two wide, having 1760 hectares of open water.[1] Afambo receives its inflow from Lake Gummare from a channel at its northern point, and has its outflow in the swamps on its southwest shores where it empties into Lake Bario.

The first European to visit Lake Afambo was Wilfred Thesiger, who explored the course of the Awash to its ultimate ending point in 1935. Thesiger led his party along the eastern and southern sides of this lake.[2] This area did not see another visitor from outside Ethiopia until Pele Thompson retraced Thesiger's steps in May and June 2001. There had been a bridge over the channel linking lakes Gummare and Afambo at Ebobe, but it had "collapsed some time ago." Further, while Lake Afambo had been a fresh water lake when Thesiger visited in, it has since become very saline due to the amount of water diverted upstream for irrigation purposes.[3]

gollark: Very dumb.
gollark: See, if you did `ps ; sh`, it would just execute that as a shell command and run `ps` then `sh`.
gollark: On one of my old routermodemboxes, you could actually get arbitrary shell access through a moronically dumb vulnerability in its telnet "shell" thing.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: Yes, but it's somewhat oversimplifying it.

References

  1. Robert Mepham, R. H. Hughes, and J. S. Hughes, A directory of African wetlands, (Cambridge: IUCN, UNEP and WCMC, 1992), p. 166
  2. Thesiger, "The Awash River and the Aussa Sultanate", Geographical Journal, 85 (1935), p. 16
  3. Philip Briggs, Ethiopia: The Bradt Travel Guide, 5th edition (Chalfont St Peters: Bradt, 2009), pp. 402f


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.